Full-Time
Posted on 2/21/2025
Cloud-native endpoint security solutions provider
Senior, Expert
Company Historically Provides H1B Sponsorship
Remote in Canada
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CrowdStrike specializes in cybersecurity, focusing on protecting businesses from cyber threats through cloud-native endpoint security solutions. Their main product, the Falcon platform, includes services like Falcon Pro, which replaces traditional antivirus with next-generation antivirus that integrates threat intelligence, Falcon Insight for endpoint detection and response, and Falcon Device Control to manage connected devices. Unlike many competitors, CrowdStrike's services are subscription-based, allowing clients to choose different levels of protection based on their needs. The company serves a diverse clientele, including many Fortune 100 companies, and is recognized as a leader in the cybersecurity industry, known for its effectiveness in threat detection and response.
Company Size
5,001-10,000
Company Stage
IPO
Total Funding
$468M
Headquarters
Austin, Texas
Founded
2011
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Competitive Employee Stock Purchase Plan
Remote-friendly culture
Market leader in compensation and equity awards
Competitive vacation and flexible working arrangements
Comprehensive health benefits + 401k plan
Paid Parental Leave, including adoption
Wellness programs
Professional development and mentorship opportunities
Open offices have stocked kitchens, coffee, soda and treats
This article is part of VentureBeat’s special issue, “The cyber resilience playbook: Navigating the new era of threats.” Read more from this special issue here.Deepfakes, or AI-driven deception and weaponized large language models (LLMs) aren’t just cyber threats; they’re the new weapons of mass exploitation. Adversaries aren’t just hacking systems anymore; they’re hacking people and their identities.Impersonating executives, bypassing security with stolen credentials and manipulating trust at scale are all redefining the new threatscape. It’s an all-out cyberwar with identities hanging in the balance. AI and generative AI are giving adversaries an edge in how quickly they can fine-tune and improve their tradecraft.The result: Massive breaches and ransomware demands that are setting new records and fueling double extortion demands.CrowdStrike’s 2024 Global Threat Report highlights this concern, revealing that 60% of intrusions now involve valid credentials, revealing the growing threat of identity-based attacks. Jeetu Patel, Cisco’s EVP and CPO, describes the fundamental problem enterprises face: “The attacks are getting very coordinated, but the defenses are very isolated. That dissonance is not a healthy distance to have.”Shlomo Kramer, cofounder and CEO of Cato Networks, echoed that view: “The era of cobbled-together security solutions is over.” Cato’s rapid growth underscores how businesses are moving to unified, cloud-based security to eliminate these gaps.Adversaries ranging from rogue attackers to nation-state cyberwar units are prioritizing the exfiltration of identities at scale and profiting from them for financial and political gain (sometimes both).It’s on security leaders and their teams to shift their security postures to adapt and stop identity-driven attacks, beginning with continuous authentication, least privilege access and real-time threat detection
This article is part of VentureBeat’s special issue, “The cyber resilience playbook: Navigating the new era of threats.” Read more from this special issue here.Enterprises run the very real risk of losing the AI arms race to adversaries who weaponize large language models (LLMs) and create fraudulent bots to automate attacks.Trading on the trust of legitimate tools, adversaries are using generative AI to create malware that doesn’t create a unique signature but instead relies on fileless execution, making the attacks often undetectable. Gen AI is extensively being used to create large-scale automated phishing campaigns and automate social engineering, with attackers looking to exploit human vulnerabilities at scale.Gartner points out in its latest Magic Quadrant for Endpoint Protection Platforms that “leaders in the endpoint protection market are prioritizing integrated security solutions that unify endpoint detection and response (EDR), extended detection and response (XDR) and identity protection into a single platform. This shift enables security teams to reduce complexity while improving threat visibility.”The result? A more complex threat landscape moving at machine speed while enterprise defenders rely on outdated tools and technologies designed for a different era.The scale of these attacks is staggering. Zscaler’s ThreatLabz indicated a nearly 60% year-over-year increase in global phishing attacks, and attributes this rise in part to the proliferation of gen AI-driven schemes. Likewise, Ivanti’s 2024 State of Cybersecurity Report found that 74% of businesses are already seeing the impact of AI-powered threats. And, nine in 10 executives said they believe that AI-powered threats are just getting started.“If you’ve got adversaries breaking out in two minutes, and it takes you a day to ingest data and another day to run a search, how can you possibly hope to keep up?” Elia Zaitsev, CTO of CrowdStrike noted in a recent interview with VentureBeat.The new cyber arms race: Adversarial AI vs
Food and ag continues to be a target for ransomware attacks, according to a new report from threat intelligence agency the Food and Ag-ISAC (Information Sharing and Analysis Centers).“Farm-to-Table Ransomware Realities” examines ransomware attacks on the sector, which increased in 2024 and are predicted to rise further as threat actors target vulnerabilities in the supply chain. Last year, food and ag saw 212 ransomware attacks, up 27% from 167 in 2023.More than half of all attacks on food and ag are ransomware, says the Food and Ag-ISAC, which partners with the IT-ISAC to monitor ransomware incidents, Ransomware in food and agriculture now accounts for 5.5% of total ransomware attacks across industries. Of the 11 sectors monitored by ISAC, food and ag ranked sixth for ransomware attack volume.‘Cascading impacts’ on the whole sectorRansomware attacks put the company as well as its suppliers and partners at risk, notes the report, and a single disruption can have “cascading impacts” on the whole industry.As an example, the report highlights ransomware attacks impacting agricultural production lines:“Any downtime caused by an attack could lead to a chain reaction of delays, potentially causing late planting or harvesting windows. As a result, crops may need to be palletized and moved to other regions during an active growing season. This is already done in cases of severe weather, such as droughts or flooding, but it is an expensive and taxing process that strains limited resources.”The report also highlights the additional stressor of health and human safety being at risk when food and ag production are put at risk.Intellectual property — particularly where genetics are concerned — is also at risk, although the Food and Ag-ISAC notes that at this point, financial gain is the primary motivation for attacks on the sector.Who is making the attacks?RansomHub — a comparatively young ransomware group, having emerged in 2024 — carried out the most attacks on the food and ag sector last year.The group uses the “ransomware-as-a-service” model, where an operator recruits affiliates who pay to use the ransomware service. LockBit (see below) was previously the world’s most active RaaS group; law enforcement officials from 10 different countries disrupted the operation in 2024
MARLBOROUGH, Mass., Feb. 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Superna today announced a new partnership with CrowdStrike to integrate Superna's Data Security Edition with the industry-leading CrowdStrike Falcon® cybersecurity platform. Leveraging Falcon® Next-Gen SIEM , this integration drives SOC transformation and delivers real-time data protection, keeping businesses operational with file-level rollback from immutable snapshots.The speed and sophistication of cyber attacks continues to increase, with breakout times now measured in minutes. The Superna and CrowdStrike integration prevents advanced threats targeting critical data, accelerates detection and response, and streamlines security operations. Customers gain enhanced ransomware defense with the ability to detect storage anomalies early, prevent unauthorized access through automated user lockouts, and recover quickly with snapshots and file-level restoration. Additionally, fast host containment helps ensure compromised devices are quickly isolated, streamlining incident response within Falcon Next-Gen SIEM.Falcon Next-Gen SIEM integrates both native and third-party data, threat intelligence and AI-driven automation to stop breaches with speed and efficiency
What Happened: CrowdStrike announced a breakthrough in agentic AI-driven security with the release of Charlotte AI Detection Triage.